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Bristol Instruments, Inc. - 872 Series High-Res 4/24 LB

Tracing Environmental Change via Scallops

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Hank Hogan

“You are what you eat” is true not just for people — it also works for scallops, members of the large family of marine bivalve mollusks. Scallops are a potential treasure trove for environmental scientists because their shells are grown layer by layer, incidentally recording environmental conditions reflected in the materials they have digested. Some researchers are trying to read that shell-encased record in species such as the Pecten maximus, or great scallop, which is found in a wide range of waters. “The aim is to use this kind of archive in ‘unknown’ temperate ecosystems, where there...Read full article

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    Published: February 2008
    Accent on ApplicationsApplicationsenvironmental conditionsmarine bivalve mollusksplasma mass spectrometryspectroscopy

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